The Lucknow Sentinel, 1932-07-14, Page 344444"
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NatureSayslt
ith- ow-eri
A.11.01-1:1,0Aele R LQE in ,
' "Airiel)ca..'Porteste"- •
I °nee had a rether..mentota,ble •exe
Perience Wtttli a waterAlly. I had
'been at 'a houee,party, and, tee he'
lia-d et"ired a ,the coinpany
• one 'morning ' and had gene for a
'walk alone hie the. woods., Here I
.founda Ably pond, and on It a sfugle
perfect waterluy. Litle . gusty fra-
grant airs out of the „forest. _made its.
-Teeming clialige slide veeringly . on ,
•the eveter. • . It seepjed_yearne.
'lug , • • • .
• I. was ".ailtnirilig, .the 'snowy.
bloOni; sailfng. IdJy,. and.
• • pereepleia g. ,tlia thether
houle-geests, 'Whose •Arieolitieti t,
bad •Iled • "would not have thus*an-
., , :tiered to admire'. g 111Y,-ebekted me
• 4 sounded a. step Turning -4 faVea
, . the -chief: veLr What cquld,he
,be doing tbr.•
0.1
e "How. ' did. you find my tily?" he
,---.:,--asked.-. --ecTiiii'la ink-foilfelf visit ' tp
• -her, .iloo bad she can't. just -sail
s: ***-aereeas--414,4---wantse-tote -teat- 4ike-
. ',people •'-• anchormi ' to the . mud.
- . Whet?" ' .
, . Ever since". that , ..experiencee, I've
• - ' .. been ,far less sure of the origigalitY
•
, ' ,and the; lenetinese of '.my feelities:'••
. -..
The lartmtes, grows eloier to "the
, e ' earth -than any ether flower ..fo beau -
and fragrauce. e .1t.; peeps forth
. . .., with starry-. eyes - front layeee 'ef dead
. eleavesi and is the first. bloOm of the
...., spring • to Woo one Co" the woods.
. .., wey.en, ' the. .great gray ' Spearlteacti-,O
wlld -es,e-otreate- narelewarel
f
tote t e WOOds'ite misty with. tints
l'...• -.. --cebee
4c
of miming green; before , there is a
. "single songster ,heard In the foredt,
•' spring'e darling recluSe. domes traL'
. grently forth, -as fair is 'hope; as
_ _ ---sustaining-etek-w-interevreity''''sonly "ale
. •;:"; . felillreents of love's promises: • •••
The. great, rose ,mallow is perhaps
the mostalluring et all. Wild -flow-
•, ersi-par'tie Lecauee'' it. persists • in,
'growing 'lir ItlaCCeSSIble..PlIC.EiS! . 'It
' . ' is'. the , love w,e eiever meet; th.e.,..bope.
• - we' never realize. A. rose mallow
• has elwaYs been .to .me a vision of
. • beauty unattainable, having the
glamour of sinisete...in it, and the Nee• .
. or. 'sad' sea -horizons. .' ...
: The, yellow• jasinitie is a tepid of
" • the Sotithei 'a-etc/rests mid • a, '1 ejoice.
.:
Ing child it is,'14 beauty *lid ' its
• •• • • feagrance are inch' .that one COtifld
. . ha rd ly imaghte grace ' more, refilled.
if you can't make. love to a. niaidem,
• ,
- With. jasmine 'showers atiove; . • :.
- •I'liere•a. no such .thing ,is tonmece,' .
. .Theree no such thing as. love! '' ' • •
. T..
. . ,
' . Whenever 1 thiuk of jasmine, I see
' oaks.' and hollies .1 and sweet -gums
:• . • , • canopied with ,exquisite greenery.''of
• „
this delicately rioting Vine. and I'see
. starry saffron . 'showers stayed in air.
• And the sPrinetime.softly'swings her
censer in my heart. .
, 1 dearly .love the wild columbine
. „
for at least • twoereaeons: . for its
• . • swaying delicate beaute:. and for its
' blithe hardihood in growing out of
•'socks -like • the loveliness- Of soul
springing out, of adversity- . It re..
calls to me a• certain meadow trout
stream, and a prince of fishermen,
• Henry Tan Dyke. It evas long my
., • privilege to fish this etream well
' Itinf,-Or 'rather; 'tei wafelt him, the'
. old piaster. which afforded me more
, • . pleasure than angling myself. At
, a certain point. along the stream the
' bank is high and. rocky. There are-
'decebetry vines atnbling greeely itiVer
- .
the stones; . Iliel.e 'are hawthorn
bushes; there are little white violets
like babes in theewoods. And there
. is wild columbine. Out a the rocks
• it grows. There-. will be .a patch
*- , of_ seal not larger than the palm of
one band - thin and starved. • But
. in. this ;the columbine groWs. shutt-
ing its roots through Cold ' forbid-
' dine crevices in the rock. ...How;
ever fast the. fishing, l' never saw
Henry 'Van Dyke, pass' the swaying
red alines of thile.toluinliine with-
. out Paesing to worship' lih'teledly
at their deliCate shrine,
, heourd not. have been more than
six years old When 1 ,aw my first
Wild .rose. growhig In a clay bank".
There bad been a' ellowe.r, not • long
before, so that. the .delicate ' leayes
Were coolly, pearled:- • And teitialitig
front the foliage" was the moat dad,
ems odor 1 had 'ever 'smelled. $
. . •
•imagined that the fragrance came
from. the Rink bloomee .how 'sure-
eprieed i w4a when my "Mother ex,
plateed. that the leaves. gave the
ee • ''
d.flew,ers doenot eaa rula take
kindly to .-.ctellization, 1 have tried
trensplantingeand improvIng arbutus)
.1adyelipper,' chicory, black-eyed
,Suseit, .and many ethers.But, they,
.pine fee home --for the sweet wild-,
.erness of nature. Chicory showe 'a
heavenly.. blue in ,the etaived.uPland
pasture: lint when set in richt soil.
:fertilized, and otheirWlse peter; -it
..went. to stein and coaree leaves.: The
blossoms 'were , few. and, II/fetter: It
ecald, !la , Stand' prosperity. Per-
imps-lt7cOmeetrpirfectitorlivtIoirc
as 'ft • is anybody's flower; If we try..
Jo apprepriete'll,..lis charm ,faitiy.'
;,One :Or the Mose, etartling and at
.t.16. seine 'time beantiful wild -ft -ewers.
In al1 nature, .i8'the regat aii•dInalis,,
brciora that?, n'.dattnt •••• wood-
lands lifts is gorgeO4,. red.'sPire,
'Sunward., seeming to:,carol" a; Scarlet,
pradrigel., .Wiferenothingohetreeta;
the view., .11s.cri:Inion'sPire,cai eaS-J,
ily be seen for dlatattee. o, 200
And-Ats--presence invests the
Wood with a princely charm, -as if.
royalty were approaching. There is
about the beat -ICY ',cif this,: flower .the
. _ ,
ceremony of loveliness, •a rite of
splendor. •
One day , in, late june. 'friend and
I were: driving up * mountain vale
The day ,wa,s .cloedy, ' but 1 had
chosen to bring,this comrade, out
,caese he was, depreSsed, , -and the
Aspect. of' the: hills And the "tin'stain-:
ed ,betiety of the little delle beside
the road would, '1 kite*, heal his
heart if :anything, wiId. . It. was. in,
my etletodetel.....4.W.P...:heett.le. e..9Pttg.
ot 'beatify,and let nature's 'quiet
lovelieess de its work., And My
-chance. came. ,
• The road dipped into a dewy' hol-
low. On °tie side •was .a neble ANALYSIS. ..
egreeetheofeealtse_endil Lek& .../"....stitA/TrilEo.:1_7.8.1.942.
OlympleRonnot.nce
•A•
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are
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eeeeefe,cse
rp e/ , 444i•
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A.:plenge. into the sea of matrimony will be taken •by*Mickey
-and -Geer-gia-Coleman, twee a Anieeleaei-4eadiage-diverleee-There
gelng.to wait u.n.tm
il after the olypic genies,. thOugh.
a • •
Sunday School
.
Lesson.
4-40-419-111-0.
,July 24. Lesson IV -The Deliverance
_ eat _the_Fted..Sea--eEXOcjus- 44:,-40-16,
• 21, 22. Golden TexteeThe Lord
• is my strength, and my long, and
• he is become my salvatIone=Exodus
1e:
whieh sti3od a •fairy forest of maid-
enhair ferns. on 'the other side
was a mountailn meadow s•teetolting
away under Massive starlet, melte to
the distant mountain stream. 1 saw
1.1.."MOSES' CONFIDENtE, vs: 13, 14.
"III. DELIVERANCE,. vs. .15; 16, 21, 22.
'
INTRODUCTION-The'passage,of the
Red Sea was regarded by Israel itself
-the celmson turrets of tall cardmalts. 'a.., the.inost iteportant event' in their
'history.. Men of later generations,
Between the ferns and' the' scarlet'
towers 1 stopped' the -carI pointed: prophets a,nd tiaalnaists, referred to it•
.
again and again...It was truly a watere "in' Y
M
o at is ca (4: ; oses
out neithine to hien, for , the beer! - ...te , . . . . , . heti called it "th- ' d f G d ” 4- 20 causing- asthma aS well. ' . • .
sr a in their. history. Before it, thee - to o , o , . .
reJoices m•ore' in making its.' own b . . • . • A Man of, God II M - In 'a paper. teed annual meat
11. MOSES' emeemeNce, vs. 13) 14.
•
ICWs'1„; Highway.
Itttoisevagt,a4d
roa, whose eibboned
Smooth surfaced .as a floor, -
Was once the route of cavaliers
In stalely aach and four.
Here gallant beaux in powdered wig,
And bells in ruffled gown,
To many a party, ball and rout, °
Rode Own to old Jamestown. .
•
How still it is along the road,
How most divinely still--
Thd, abollt pattern of the ieavesi
The shadpws on :the hilll •
Miito purre'l'a aer"-""r-rei coete-4'nt. "*"
rabbtt scurries by, e•
A drift of erows with :lazy wi#ffs
Climb pp .A drowsy
' Pass-. an !ordhard 'tliat,;bas .feam.ed
To c1oud efefeetherY pink; • . •-•‘
Phe ate 14
„Of thrush and 50,1e,•641rik;
„
I catee 'my. 'breath! Across a field •
Of wind-blown silvery wheat, • •
•I'leeeeeraith. -of P-Tcaltentats'giteles) .
Oa fIght elegive , feet. . .
•
'Through field, and wookand sleepy ,
•. • town, •
The 'road winds ott..:its way,' ••
. .
White' driftipg ,ageinst the
Before his thin& people; ..well -nigh -
•paralyzed With 'fear, .stoett. the lion-,
heetted_leader, 'Mesee._Qnlyethecaueee
-ageous .can,,inspire cotirege; and the.
genfidence of Moses, begotten of .faith
,in Pat heart; into the."..people.,
"Here as ,so.'often inthe story," says
Professor MacFadyen, "the. lonely
figure of .. Moses. rises, in splendid •
eontreeteto-the-.people-aboutehim-.-- He-
av". )nore that/ the foe and the tbe sea;
'he:endured,' as 11: 27 finely'
ays,.`as ;seeing the he. saw
one *horn the winds ertd tLe sea must
obey." ." "Stand firm," lie seidee"end
•se. theesalVationOf the 'Lord." it was
.obVioua thatleuman. power, Could' aveg
,nOthing;" jt was just as o.beiOus that
th.: glorious pessage -.the, Red Sea- .•
eves, an act Of •G.od!a,""stringth made : ' •
DELiVERANCE,, '.1).-011en .,DetIrdLtti. be., •
'perfect •in. weakness." • ,
ys: 15, 16, 21;22, .Cause Of Dreaded Asthma
,
,• blue, •• " ,
Frail butterflies At play. 1 -;
it : Wiud,s With mane .a heed And
'• curve
'TO cross a singing elver,.
Where •Pale green willow. fringes.
, ' . .
_Ane 113a csh. gees s quiver.. .._• _ _
. •
If Toil are worn with: city street,.
Or choked With dusty fret, '
Ride down the road with' Wasbingtoa,
• Match 'wits with LafaVette!',
, .
-By Florence 2Wilson Roper, .
Dallas Texas Kaleidoscope:* •
• The rod) which Moses was bilden tn pelleu-Pollen, the bugbear of hay
lift up direr the sea, had been given fever, sufferers, ts n,ow accused of
, 1 -e psee, was ac-
. ,were a and of spiritless .slaves; after
discoveries of beauty. • •
. . it. 'they Were Pod's triumphant free- leg of the Canadian Medical Asiocia-
credited with having extraordinary
• My friend, as was natural, c sew men. Let Us t.....st 'otir glance briefly 'never., It was the power of • God's tion, Dr. penrge C. Hale, of London,
the eael 'flaines, of ' the cardinalis backwards. Unjer the last awful Vie - Spirit dwelling mightily in him: This Out.,, saict. inhalation of pollee wee,.
first. * Then he looked ' awaY Jo the ta ion of 'God, the destruttlon of tht'lmrer-vrth'614 Ift to ber media one of the major causes of asthma.
through his. clothes or threugh his
tiny .Sherwood- that thee maiden- .-crstbern; Pharaoh's , heart • at' last
hairs made. . His eyeswe reliteil, Yie. tiled. ' The -israelites were permit,
' er
ted to leave; 'indeed, the Egyptians
fiia apitit " • calmed.' Who. dentea.
evere',gladte.eee the last of thent Out
miracles? ' We 'Stayed 'till sundown;
it to the ,wilderness they went, Gd
eed• froin, that time of c-ommunion .himself.guiding them with a pillar of
with natural beauty and peace. mY .cloud• by day and a pillar of fire ey
friend began what proved to he. a .r.ieht) . It is dlfficult ,to follow their
course with an; degree 'et certainty;
they•were not trained inthe nice pre-
cisions of modern geography. At any
tete they reached the Red "Sea , (or Sea
o: Rushes, , as the 'Bible .calls• it);
though at what point they touched the
RA Sea -whether the Gulf of Akaba.
or the Gulf of cvez, or Lake Tinteach
-it is perlietis impossible t ) say. Here
fhey were to see "the arm of the Lotel
revealed."
I. STRAITENED! vs. '10-12. • • •
Alt through the Bible the•Egyptians
appear .to have been 'a"fickle and un-
eeliable people: Isaiah seoinfully re•
fets to them 'as "this broken reed;"
Isaiah 36: 6. No sooner had the
Israelites left Egypt than the Phar-
aoh, true to the unstable character of
he, race regretted that he had per-
mitted eihem go. After. all, the
Israelites were, very useful: they bed
made excellent slaves. A division, of
Egyptian army--thariotry, cav•
alry and infantry (v. 9) -were dis-
patched to,turn them back to boedage.
It is 'likely that .this Sterly comprised
simplyethe garrisareforce stationed en'
the borders of Goshen to observe' and
contest the movements of pomadic
tribes. The Israelites, seeing, that
they w.ere oersted with a • well -equip
ped forte, lost heart: They began to
upbraid.. -Moses-the- -first---of
meny murmurings against bie'leader-
shiN Wee it not h 'nista% they ask-
ed, to make this 'dash for, freedom?
• Did .not .slavery in Egyist, 'severe
though it wes, offer relative. security?
Better a second-best like slaverythen
this sere and awful destruction! Let
le, shine, they :,a3 cried in Egypt-,
• the language of despair, of rented-
• 'tient with he secotid-best; let us
'alone, cried tho demon prisseeeed in
'the syetsgegue t Capernautri (Mark
24) --the ceaseless language of sin.
They were indeed in despeinte strAite,
Before 'theyewas the Red Sea, behind
em the Egyp' an artnii-:' They coulki.
go.neither forward nor backward. All
retreat was tut off. They were faced'
with nothing but destruction -or God!
complete recovery
iOne day .in that 'delicious season
when the 'resebays were bloom, I
had gone into a- shadowy ilea to See
the :pink and snowy bloom, glim,-
Altering', in the fragrant woOdle above•
a Crystal- cascade. On my way back,
just at sundown, I met a little 'mann-
tain -girl, Doria Boone, hose people
knew well. Though • only seven
years old, .she had her. share of wt•rlt
to do, and now was driving a cow
ahead' of her eel the ,,,ineuntaie path
It was Just that deep hour, when a
huge and thoughtful silence trances
the world.'
'You been, loolche at, the. rhode'd-'
Odious,' 'ain't your she adised,
.,1 admitted it_ •
"Which do you like best?" She
asked, looking up at Ime while her
bare toes played in the sand -"dee
you like 'yelling the •flowers, or do
you like leaving them .where they.
are? lailus Leave them." .
' Doris was right. The way to go
wildflowering is not to_gether them,
but to love them,' to leave them, and
to bring their beauty home in one's
heart. .
•
•
-r-
"What did the judge do to 'that
young' man .who stole the ,dictiun-
aryr , •
:lie gave him a long sentence to
work oat."
MUTT AND. JEFF— By BUD #IS.HER
00.141i
1141404-'70
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WIT14
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Sets utsnit
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ger
v,ifstoAtis
MY oLum-WUR. sverz-Loviosids
AUGuST0A. cAto.ow Egitr •
ALokits sorrtiour you kieo
wousx• 1at, i' ,G Boum.
z n*.4-o 'YOUR. tiC.I.PIN)G. ItAt.3D
GUt:De T ree4iiiR.G youk
INTE.LLIGE.NT" xsehro AleVISCe •PiCc..• ris)
PRO,lEcTS- X At soLuTEAN Am
LeSt- WITIkottr" Nfoup SuPttea BOSO.K..sc,
AcsriAG.ekl 115 '1.0kY MAW('
TL Pt.ANS
Ile ,nanied eating of cectair food s and
staff. Elisha parted the waters of the efflevia and proteles Of bacterikas
Jordan with the mantleof Elijah (2 others '
ings 2: 12). ; Ohazi attempted to rais_e •
tLe Shunammite's son with the staff of Asthma, he ixplained, was duo In
Elisha, 2 'Vega' 4:. 31. When Mesas early stages to spasms in ,the small
stretched out his rod over the sea, it bronchioles, small tubes eunnteg froth
obeyed its Master, ,A later Psalmist the two main branches of the wind -
has clothed th;,. event; with poetic iin- pipe. to the lungS.-,Leter it, develops
agery: "The sea: saw him and fled," tato continual spasms whichlead to
Psalm 114: 3. An,explanatioh of this chenges in .the small tubes.'•
even on more l'atbralistic grounds is e •
He suggeste• sufferers feoM asthina
provided in v. 21 -"The Lord .caused 'after each attack 'allotild •write dowu
the sea to go back by a strong' east everything the: did or ate on the pre -
wind all that night." On the basis of
viola day. After several attacks, he
this remark, it is thought by some -that
id. it might be found that ,Some food
the neck of the sea at this point *as
shallow' as indeed is true of this Sea or deed appeared ery Hat 'and
of Rushes as, a 'whole, and that a that ' itS ellmivation would prov.e
furious wind blowing all i.ight would •beuefit'
have the unusual4 hut, not altogether
impossible, effect of driving the waters
back, leaving the seabed comparative -
1 dry. It must be remembered that
the Hebrews did met distiriguish be-
tween the natural and the supernatur-
al. All natural phenomena were to
them supernatural; for all were 'leder
the sovereign power of God and eft
exhibited his _power. So the sacred
histbrian recognized a nateteal• cause.
"a strong east wind," but. back of
this again, and controlling ;t for his
own , redemptive purpose,. was Gol.
Whatever the nature or explanatien of
the event, it was in _any. case the
Lord's doing. ,
Mrs:. A. "Tom, our physician
wants to send me to astnntner re -
"sort for too, weeks."
"Mr. A. -"Well, I 4(410111 • Manic)
him."
X FORGI'Ve.. yoLf,
Miirtss6 BY The !NAV -
WHAT pLAms
Wive You?
,
Why Worry? .
4.
-Amexice-8.0dest
„
,
•, Because, 'Atte is said" to. b&.
• Aniertce's • eldest . inotheie' -MEL, , • ,.
'N44•111.1efflei 19.94eak-ot:d Apaei„'4. •
. of .0k1t/honakc reeeited ft
geld m;edei from tha Federate)1,'.,
. Women's :ellipse • •• ' ”•• :
" 'A Grave 'World '
B_y Stanlesi Baldwin_ '
(toed President ,c)P the Ceunell, in a
• Houseilt Commons Speech.)
The grearimportAnce of .this. June- •
tere of the Ottawa .gonference is that
it comes it a time when we are dell-
nitely at ,the, parting.ef the ways. It
*ill be impossible for things to. drift
• any bringer. We have got to advance
in the direction of closer fiscal' relit- ,
tionship,'er we .:have got to drift aparL •„
There is no question about it. , • -
•" The ,whole evolution of the limo- •
neinic pull of the world is gradually '
to. increase, tee -larger units, and 1' • .
bene we may_ see. in..Europe 'a great ,
change in the future, or it will be all .
up, with. European trade. And If the
doMiniOns do not get into this closet• ,
ecemomic ,upion with use I need net
in thia Honse and With this audience '
-point •ou' the eeonenlic danger:I •
which;• ter those who trains the em-
• pire and the traditions a Our race,.
lie between each different Component • '
•
'part of the empire. „ . •
I,
We have te remember there Is no
such thing as isolating yourself from ,
World denression. Countries haste:
tried it -Particularly the United _
• Sates : They tried to keep out other
people's • goods,' and did ieflueneet —
World cendifiona for a time, but even
• they cannot' do it. :Their distresil to.e
....de and ,the diseters_evehich-ehatre •
oyertaken them -welt, there' is .no
conDtry in the world which is suffer- ••
ing more. It ntay be beneficial from
the standpoint of a sinAfrcountry to ' --
take measures to isolate itself. It
ganpot be dome by all of them. We
must' do ale we can to break it diewn.
•
,
•
Britain Heads List •
• As • Buyer of 'Anthracite
Ottawa, ,Ont. -:-Imports of anthra-
cite into. Canada' from Great Britain': ,
exceeded those from the 'United •
States in May, the first time in hise
•tory• that this happened in any one
mentli. In Ma'y the iinperts 'trent •
Rritain were 170;967 tons and 'from
.the 'United States 150,802. tons. • In.
May, 1931.,they, were 'trons
141,911 tons, andfrom. the United
., ••
. Quaint Morsel of • graveyard 'States, 20§,394
The sumniary of trade for May
philosophy wrieten.about 1875. , .'
'A' lrundied yeers ago or'more
• - issued by the Dominion Bureau . of .
'Men Wrung their hands and. walked
. 'the floor.
And werrled over .thie and that, .
And thought • their cares- would
squash them flat.
:Whk're are those ‘i•Orrieli 'beings
how? • ,
The beardenemit and, festibe cow
Eat grass ahove their. moulded, bones
And jay': birds call'. instrideet' tones.
And wherethe'ilis they worried
forgetten all for evermore.
-done all the' Sorrow and thp sycie
'ricaljirn linadred years ago:
The grief, t•hat makes' kou scream
today ' •
Like ,it her griefs. Will ' pass away,
,
And when Yineve cashed your little
• .• "string.
And jay birds o'er your 1 osOm sing.
The stranger pausing t e to vievit
The Marble Works" tlia cov
. think " mien tIii uselessness
01human worry and distress, „
SO let •the worry business slide.
Live while eou live. and when you've
died,
The folks will say, around. your bier:
"He, Made a bit while he • was here."
moae :
-Staitistics shows that ethe balance :
with 'Great Britain was favorable to
S 's •
Canada by $3.743,681. and 'er th
'United •tateunfavorable be.
388.007, Por the ' twelve menthe
ended in may thefavOrable balance
was . $32.891.398, contrasted with au
unfavorable balance of $4/1,737,551,
foj t•he previous period: The unfav-
orable balance .• with the United
States was. cut Iron' $213.859,398 t�
$87.737.978. •
A -Trite Test
true /Went:friendship: In-,
walk with a friend for an "hour in Per-
fect• silence without wearying of One
an ot heee eom pa ny. „
'
• Duty"
The thing which must 'be. must
for the best: s
God helps us to'clo our duty and not
• shrink.. .
•
And trust Hs mercy 'nimbly, for the
rear. ()Wen Meredith.
be
Feces are Made beautiful by kind-
ness. It is a divine sculptor,
:It requires a .very clever tongue to
get A foolish one out of trouble. .,
An Impassioned Outburst Of Oratory.
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